But Premiere Pro CS5.5 doesn’t support two of the most HTML 5-friendly video formats, WebM and Ogg as a result, if you’re using Premiere Pro as part of a Web workflow, you’ll either need to find other conversion tools or continue to fall back on Flash video output. You can’t instruct the Media Encoder application that ships with Premiere Pro to output multiple files at once, either. With this new version, however, you can drag sequences (video projects) from Premiere directly into Media Encoder to get them rolling, rather than using menu commands. You can create customized presets in Media Encoder, too, so that once they’re queued up there, you can choose a preset for each sequence and click just one more button to begin processing. Premiere and Media Encoder have new presets for outputting tablet-friendly video, as well. Similarly, Premiere Pro CS5.5 has an improved Watch Folder feature: You simply drag a folder to Media Encoder, and whenever you add something to that folder, the application begins rendering it, even if it’s in the background. You can create multiple Watch Folders and set each to output different file types, and once again you can set them up to encode whatever is saved there to your preferred output format.